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That's true, Hermione created those fake galleons for the D.A., and I don't know how shopkeepers would be able to tell them apart if they were given one from a customer. No doubt the goblins at Gringotts would be able to differentiate though. It'd be a fair bet to say that money's one of them.

I agree about the money...especially gold. You can't just conjure/transfigure gold; that's what you need the Philosopher's Stone for. So I think gold is probably one of the Five Principle Exceptions, at the very least. Money itself...perhaps legitimate coins in the wizarding world have spells on them, like wizarding watermarks, and the Ministry guards the secret of that spell very well (can't imagine they'd trust the goblins with the spell, what with the distrust between the races, not to mention the fact that goblins aren't allowed wands, but I imagine goblins could tell a fake).

I also like Ascendio's suggestion of people/animals - life? Maybe that's the first principal exception?

Also I was sort of having this conversation with friends the other day, and we thought maybe potable water might be one of the exceptions. Not sure, though, if there's any evidence against that in the books - characters actually drinking water from Aguamenti or whatever.

Ahh sorry Hayden. I didn't remember that bit - I was just throwing that idea out there, I remembered we'd mentioned it.

Hmm but maybe if you conjure something living it doesn't last? -shrug- But then again most of Transfiguration involves turning animals into inanimate objects or inanimate objects into animals so I dunno.

I agree with the love thing. Somehow, I think bringing back someone from the dead would be included as well. With the life thing, how do we know that Hermione's birds didn't disappear after half an hour or so, or the dog Cedric transfigured in GoF. Perhaps you can create an imitation of life, but not life itself. It could be related to the food thing. You wouldn't be able to conjour up a chicken to kill it and eat it because you can't conjour food. Thus you can't conjour life. Or perhaps it's the other way around. This could incorporate the death thing. I'd agree with the human thing, though, and I too can't really say why.

So, at the moment, you've got, love, food, money and life. I'd love it if the last one was something ridiculous like ink or sponges, like with one of the twelve uses of dragon's blood being an oven cleaner.

Life: Hermione was able to conjure birds (yellow canaries, I think) in HBP. But birds can think for themselves. I think that magical animals cannot be conjured and humans cannot be conjured. Don't have a solid explanation for humans, but Hermione conjured birds and Cedric Diggory transfigured a rock into a dog (Labrador?) in GoF. Draco was also turned into a ferret. I don't think you can turn an animal human, though.

But then, I'd like a reason for why magical animals can't be conjured, and why humans cannot be conjured or be the result of a transfiguration. Why shouldn't you be able to give some of your own magic into an animal to make it magical. But then again, perhaps animals have their own sort of magic that can't be imitated?

Water: I'm not quite sure what you mean, Minna. Water from a spell is drinkable: When Harry and Dumbledore were in Voldemort's cave, Harry conjured water for Dumbledore to drink, though probably by a spell Voldemort had placed, the water vanished just as it touched the drinker's lips.

Hermione was apparently able to conjure birds, just as Draco was apparently able to conjure a serpent using Serpensortia when he duelled Harry. What is more probable is that these creatures are either Summoned from somewhere (you can Summon food is you know where it is) or else they're not real and will fade and die.